Share the article

U.S. stablecoin law and new...

The U.S. passage of sweeping stablecoin rules this summer is triggering a wave of change across the online casino...

U.S. Online Casinos See Continued...

The U.S. online casino sector is closing 2025 on a note of consolidation and regulatory change, with major operators...

UK Tightens Grip on Online...

The UK’s gambling landscape is undergoing rapid regulatory change this year, forcing online casino operators to recalibrate marketing, product...

UK Casino Overhaul Forces Players...

Land-based casinos in the UK are entering a new era of regulation that will change how venues operate and...

Subscribe

U.S. stablecoin law and...

The U.S. passage of sweeping stablecoin rules this summer is triggering a wave of change...

U.S. stablecoin law and new crypto payments thrust online casinos into rapid overhaul

The U.S. passage of sweeping stablecoin rules this summer is triggering a wave of change across the online casino sector, forcing platforms to reassess...

U.S. Online Casinos See Continued Growth as Operators, Regulators and Tax Rules Shift Ahead of 2026

The U.S. online casino sector is closing 2025 on a note of consolidation and regulatory change, with major operators reporting stronger-than-expected results, states locking...

UK Tightens Grip on Online Casinos as Levy, Stake Limits and Advertising Rules Reshape Industry

The UK’s gambling landscape is undergoing rapid regulatory change this year, forcing online casino operators to recalibrate marketing, product design and compliance strategies as...

UK Casino Overhaul Forces Players and Operators to Rethink Strategies as New Rules Roll Out

Land-based casinos in the UK are entering a new era of regulation that will change how venues operate and how players approach the gaming...

U.S. stablecoin law and new crypto payments thrust online casinos into rapid overhaul

The U.S. passage of sweeping stablecoin rules this summer is triggering a wave of change across the online casino sector, forcing platforms to reassess...

U.S. Online Casinos See Continued Growth as Operators, Regulators and Tax Rules Shift Ahead of 2026

The U.S. online casino sector is closing 2025 on a note of consolidation and regulatory change, with major operators reporting stronger-than-expected results, states locking...

UK Tightens Grip on Online Casinos as Levy, Stake Limits and Advertising Rules Reshape Industry

The UK’s gambling landscape is undergoing rapid regulatory change this year, forcing online casino operators to recalibrate marketing, product design and compliance strategies as...

UK Casino Overhaul Forces Players and Operators to Rethink Strategies as New Rules Roll Out

Land-based casinos in the UK are entering a new era of regulation that will change how venues operate and how players approach the gaming...

UK Tightens Online Casino Rules as Operators Face New Design, Bonus and Reporting Measures

The UK Gambling Commission has pushed through a series of high-impact rules this year that are reshaping how online casinos design games, market promotions...

Prediction markets, regulation and state fights – what’s shaping online casinos in late 2025

The online gambling landscape is shifting fast as prediction markets expand, U.S. states adjust policy, and regulators in major markets step up enforcement —...

Regulators Tighten the Screws as Offshore Operators and Big Firms Face Fresh Scrutiny

The UK gambling sector is under renewed pressure this week as regulators and prosecutors step up enforcement and industry players confront the fallout from recent policy changes and high-profile compliance failures.

A December 17, 2025 settlement between Flutter’s Paddy Power and Betfair and the UK Gambling Commission — in which the operator agreed to pay £2 million after a 2024 compliance review found significant failures to protect vulnerable customers — has sharpened attention on operator monitoring systems and the effectiveness of self-exclusion schemes. The Commission said routine checks revealed missed red flags, including extended betting sessions and large losses that were not promptly acted on, prompting the fine and a rebuke of operator safeguards. [link to the Commission’s published action appears in the original reporting]. (See: Guardian coverage.)

Enforcement, regulation and industry reaction

Regulatory activity has accelerated across several fronts this year. The Advertising Standards Authority and Committee of Advertising Practice amended the CAP Code on September 1, 2025 to extend coverage to unpaid social media content by UK-licensed operators regardless of where those operators are registered – a move designed to close a long-standing loophole that allowed some firms to use overseas registration to avoid UK rules. The change forced major operators and affiliates to overhaul marketing practices and led to an industry-wide compliance scramble, particularly among smaller firms that lack in-house legal teams.

Separately, new statutory levies and tighter affordability checks introduced earlier in 2025 — including lower thresholds for financial vulnerability assessments — have increased operating costs and changed commercial tactics. Operators say the measures aim to reduce harm and fund treatment but warn they will also squeeze margins and could depress promotional activity that drives player acquisition.

Industry reaction has been mixed. Large groups have announced upgrades to real-time monitoring and new safer-gambling platforms; smaller operators and affiliates report heightened compliance costs and paused campaigns while legal teams reassess content and targeting rules. Analysts note the regulatory push tends to consolidate market share toward well-resourced firms that can absorb compliance bills.

Offshore market and public concern

Investigations this week also highlighted a tougher spotlight on offshore, unlicensed operators that continue to target self-excluded and vulnerable players. Reporting revealed links between illicit offshore bookies and consumers who had enrolled on the UK’s GamStop self-exclusion scheme, underlining the practical limits of national controls in a cross-border online market. Campaigners and bereaved families have urged faster, international enforcement and stronger cooperation with payment providers and search platforms to block rogue sites.

Commercial consequences are emerging too. Evoke Group — owner of William Hill’s non-US operations and heavily exposed to the UK market — said earlier this month it is considering strategic options including a potential sale or break-up after government budget measures raised remote gaming duties and created significant fiscal headwinds for UK-focused operators. Analysts warn the combined effect of higher taxes, levies and marketing restrictions may prompt reshaping of portfolios across the sector.

What to watch next
Regulators plan follow-up reviews and further enforcement actions in early 2026. The CAP Code amendments are subject to consultation outcomes and likely case law from upcoming ASA rulings; the Gambling Commission has signalled closer, tech-driven supervision and quick public action where monitoring is judged inadequate. Operators’ implementation of new real-time safety systems, the outcome of statutory levy payments due in the 2025/26 financial year, and any further parliamentary moves on cross-border enforcement will be key indicators of how fast the landscape will change.

HomeOnline CasinosRegulators Tighten the...